Sunday, September 8, 2024
HomescienceNASA's Curiosity rover accidentally discovered pure sulfur crystals on Mars.

NASA’s Curiosity rover accidentally discovered pure sulfur crystals on Mars.

Date:

Related stories

NASA Inspector General Issues Scathing Report on SLS Delays

NASA's efforts to return humans to the moon have...

USA Swimming Replaces CEO Tim Hinchey, Team Manager Lindsey Mintenko

In the wake of an uninspiring performance at the...

How Google’s New Gemini Gems AI Experts Can Boost SEO

Google has announced a new feature for Gemini AI...

Ukraine’s F-16 fighter jet crashes – pilot dead

According to the military, a new F-16 fighter jet...

NASA scientists say pure sulfur has been found on Mars for the first time after the Curiosity rover accidentally uncovered a cluster of yellow crystals when it passed over a rock. The area appeared to be filled with sulfur. It’s an unexpected discovery — while sulfur-containing minerals have been observed on the Red Planet, elemental sulfur alone has never been seen before. “The sulfur only forms in a narrow range of conditions that scientists have not yet linked to the history of this site,” NASA scientists said. .

Curiosity cracked the rock on May 30 while driving through an area known as the Geddes Vallis Channel, where similar rocks have been seen all over the place. The channel is thought to have been carved by water and debris flows long ago. “Finding a field of rocks made of pure sulfur is like finding an oasis in the desert,” said Ashwin Vasavada, Curiosity’s project scientist. “It shouldn’t be there, so now we have to explain it. Finding strange and unexpected things is what makes planetary exploration so exciting.”

A rock that Curiosity rover passed over cracked, revealing yellow sulfur crystals.

NASA/JPL/Caltech/Space Science and Artificial Intelligence Program

After spotting the yellow crystals, the team later used a camera mounted on Curiosity’s robotic arm to take a closer look at them. The rover then took a sample from another nearby rock, as the pieces of rock it had broken off were too fragile to drill into. Curiosity is equipped with tools that allow it to analyze the composition of rocks and soils, and NASA says its Alpha Particle X-ray Spectrometer (APXS) confirmed it had found elemental sulfur.

See also  Missing wings on an 'alien' beetle pose an evolutionary puzzle

Latest stories